Family feasting is fun at The Boom Cafe
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DINING OUT
What must be one of the biggest surprises in the local restaurant
realm these days is the emergence of The Boom Cafe in Laguna’s
landmark Coast Inn.
Purchased a few years ago by Eastern entrepreneurs, James Marchese
and Patrick Oloughlin as part of the hotel and nightclub, the
restaurant has now become very family friendly offering a
surprisingly affordable menu designed to appeal to local tastes.
Surrounded by illuminating windows for a grandiose daytime view of
Coast Highway, the sunny room features a huge oval central bar
flanked on one side by tables graced with fresh linens and flowers
and on the other by two entertaining pool tables.
A trio of silvery overhead fans above the dining room and a
quartet of ballroom style globes suspended from a faux-pewter
hammered ceiling lend a happy glow, the theme continued with the
bar’s brushed aluminum siding. Colorfully enhancing the setting is
the vibrant personality of dynamic Violet, known locally as “The
Purple Lady,” a reflection of her perpetual choice of attire in that
passionate color spectrum. Busily bustling from table to table, her
delightfully lively presence truly brings the room alive as she
caters with warm sincerity to the dedicated clientele.
While evenings are resplendent with fascinating entertainment most
nights, and with enticing dinner offerings captivating happy patrons
Tuesday through Friday, it is the family style weekend brunch menu
devised by chef Jeff Johnson that heralds the real news here.
Noteworthy on the two-part menu is a selection of bountiful plates
encompassing each of breakfast and lunch favorites. This translates
to good, hearty American fare designed to attract family appetites.
Start with those hefty sandwiches, all heaped with some of the
crispest, hot French fries this side of the equator. Ask any kid
about the Boom burgers, 1/2 pound of certified Angus beef grilled to
your preference with a slab of Swiss or cheddar cheese and laden with
juicy tomato slices, lettuce and slivers of red onion. No less
enthusiastic are adults who equally consider this $6.95 treat a
hands-down winner. Further embellishments for 50 cents each include
sauteed mushrooms, bleu cheese, caramelized onions and bacon.
Johnson is equally proud of his turkey club sandwich because the
turkey is freshly roasted and served in hefty slices on triple decker
sourdough bread layered with plenty of bacon, tomatoes and romaine
lettuce. Toasted wheat bread is the base for the popular BLT, and for
the tuna sandwich made with tender white albacore. There’s a hearty
chicken Caesar wrap, the warm flour tortilla firmly encompassing
generous chunks of succulent chicken breast, Caesar dressing
enhancing romaine lettuce and tomatoes. Jamaican jerk chicken in a
spicy dressing with roasted bell peppers is presented on a fresh
braided roll. And, of course, those delicious greaseless French fries
accompany every order at a nominal $5.95 to $7.95.
Breakfast devotees have as many choices starting with a bountiful
fresh fruit plate going to ubiquitous steak and eggs, a 6-ounce rib
eye served with two large eggs as you like them, home fries and toast
of choice. In between comes everything from the all-American
breakfast of ham, bacon or sausage and eggs sided with home fries and
toast, to eggs Benedict and Florentine, a vegetarian scramble and a
bacon / tomato duo. You may even create your own omelet with cheddar
or jack cheese, spinach, tomatoes, mushrooms, onions, ham and bacon
from which to choose. At $5.95 for most entrees to $9.95 for steak
and eggs, this price range certainly harks back to a much earlier
era. The popular variety of favorites coupled with such decidedly
incomparable tariffs makes it small wonder locals are increasingly
finding this a deliciously affordable way to celebrate any weekend.
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